Posted on 01/05/2012 9:21:55 PM PST by Libloather
Lawyers, courts see weaknesses in defense of Obamas healthcare law
By Sam Baker - 01/05/12 12:59 PM ET
The Obama administration is headed into a Supreme Court case over healthcare reform without a clear answer to significant questions about Congresss power.
The Justice Department will file its first brief on the merits of the case Friday the beginning of a long process that will almost surely culminate in a ruling this summer. The first briefs will focus on the core question of whether it is constitutional to make almost every American buy health insurance.
The Obama administration has a winning record on that point in federal appeals courts. But even in the cases it has won, the administration has failed to answer a key question: If Congress has the power to enforce the insurance mandate, where does that power stop?
Its known in legal jargon as a limiting principle. When courts evaluate a new application of Congresss constitutional authority, they have historically wanted to see clear limits to those powers.
The DOJ has to do a better job of answering, What goes beyond your theory of federal power?' " said Ilya Shapiro, a legal scholar at the libertarian Cato Institute who opposes the insurance mandate. Theyve been asked this in every court and theyve never satisfied the court, even in the cases theyve won.
The 11th Circuit Court of Appeals the specific case now before the Supreme Court struck down the insurance mandate partially on the grounds that upholding it would open the door to a flood of regulation.
Ultimately, the governments struggle to articulate limiting principles only reiterates the conclusion we reach today: There are none, the court said in its ruling.
The mandate is, in a literal sense, unprecedented: Congress has never before required citizens to buy something from a private company solely on the basis of being citizens. The question is whether Congress is exerting a new power not authorized by the Constitution, or using its authority under the Commerce Clause in a new way, consistent with Supreme Court precedent.
Several lower courts have said the mandate falls within the bounds of the Commerce Clause, but even they have been wary about the Justice Departments inability to clearly define a limit on Congresss power.
The U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Columbia, which upheld the mandate, said it was troubling, but not fatal that the Justice Department had not identified a limit to Congresss power.
We acknowledge some discomfort with the governments failure to advance any clear doctrinal principles limiting congressional mandates that any American purchase any product or service in interstate commerce, the courts opinion said.
Tim Jost, a Washington and Lee University law professor who supports the healthcare law and the mandate, also said the lack of a clear limiting principle is the governments biggest weakness heading into the Supreme Court.
The problem is not insurmountable, Jost said, but gained new importance when a lower-court judge asked whether Congress could also make citizens buy broccoli, since a healthier population would do more to cut health costs than universal insurance coverage.
In lower courts, the Justice Department has worked around the issue of a limiting principle by arguing that healthcare is a unique market. Because hospitals are legally required to treat people who cant pay, the system is inevitably stuck with unpaid bills. Those costs are then passed on to insured people and the government.
A decision upholding the insurance mandate wouldnt open the door to other mandates because no other products involve the same kind of cost-shifting, the Justice Department says. The D.C. Circuit court accepted that rationale, but the 11th Circuit said the logic would simply put the courts in charge of determining whether future mandates are close enough to the insurance requirement.
Shapiro said the position is a policy argument, not a legal one.
Everything is unique in some way, he said. A rutabaga is not a car.
Almost - because the rookie Hussein and Congress are exempt from their own law.
“Almost - because the rookie Hussein and Congress are exempt from their own law.”
The Obama administration is headed into a Supreme Court case over healthcare reform without a clear answer to significant questions about Congresss power.
Like, making recess appointments when they aren’t in recess?
Biggest weakness is that - IF! (big “if” there) - Rowe v Wade were correct Constitutionally in finding a “right to (medical) privacy” in the Constitution, then Obamacare pushes the government right back into the middle of EVERY medical and financial decision that a doctor and patient make in EVERY instance of medical care.
If you are “buying” healthcare with Government money, you will have to play by the Government’s rules. Thus, they could pass a law mandating that people buy broccoli and whatever other foods as are officially deemed to promote good health. And yes, comrade, your urine will be randomly screened for broccoli metabolites, and if you are low you will be deemed counterrevolutionary and will be “reeducated” in Utah. In other words:
END OBAMACARE NOW!!!
It is looking more and more like 1984.
That’s the real rub with liberalism- there is no value-based platform from which to build meaningful doctrine. If your private right to abortion is so sacrosanct, how can the government force you to accept pre-natal health care?
If life does not begin at conception, what is the vehicle by which one has to submit to entering government interest?
Pick the stick with which you want to beat us, Caesar.
The court needs to also grill them as to why congress and presidents are exempt from the law.
If the commerce clause is the source of the power to do.all this, why didn’t the founders use it that way, or any other Congress and presidents?
This is Roe v Wade logic all over again. The power does not exist to do this in the constitution, that’s a fact.
“Because hospitals are legally required to treat people who cant pay,...”
Here the first problem. Privet hospitals are forced to give away goods and services (which I believe) is be on the scope of the Commerce clause. It would be a different story for a government owned hospital.
Well His Majesty Obama Has Declared,”I will Not Take No for an Answer”,so that takes care of that
When ever anything goes to the Supreme Court system that is agains’t Obama, you can pretty much say it’s a lost cause. The “court” won’t rule against him, he appointed them. Going against “dear ruler” might be reason for said dear ruler to do away with the court all together. You think for one second he wouldn’t try that when he has gone against the constitution sooooooooo many times before? He is now the “king”, just ask him. He can/will do what HE wants, not what the laws say.
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